ROINN COSANTA. BUREAU OF MILITARY HISTORY, 1913-21. STATEMENT BY WITNESS 762 DOCUMENT NO. W.S. Witness Liam McMullen, 31 Collins Park, Donnycarney, Dublin. Identity. Captain Ballycastle Company Irish Volunteers (Co. Antrim) 1919 - . Subject. National activities, Co. Antrim, 1908-1924. Conditions, if any, Stipulated by Witness. Nil File No S.2094 Form Statement by Mr. Liam McMullen. 31, Collins Park Donnycarney, Dublin. I am a native of Ballycastle, where I spent my youth and early manhood. About. 1908 or 1910 I was working with a man called Stephen Clarke who was arrested for distributing seditious posters. He was a member of the Dungannon Club and he. distributed propaganda posters on which was written "Any Irishman joining England's Army, Navy or Police Force takes his stand in. the camp or garrison of the enemy and is a traitor to his country and an enemy of his people". Stephen Clarke was Manager of a Toy Factory. Himself and three others were tried for this alleged offence but the trial judge was not too severe with them and they were released. I was in Dublin several times with Stephen Clarke who managed a Toy Factory in Ballycastle and there was a Sinn Féin Aonach held in Dublin every year around Christmas, and Clarke's factory had business connections with it. It was held in the Rotunda. The first time I was there I was with Roger Casement. During these visits to Dublin I became well acquainted with the work of the Sinn Féin organisation, and with many of the leaders including Arthur Griffith, Seán MacDiarmada and Bulmer Hobson. The latter had visited Ballycastle many times. Casement: One of my earliest childish recollections was seeing Roger Casement when he arrived on periodic visits to his ancestral home in Maherintemple which was 2. convenient to my home. It was well known locally that Roger Casement was interested in Irish politics. He was a supporter of the Liberal Party. He was an ardent Home-Ruler and was actually more than that. He was a follower of Arthur Griffith and a Separatist. He was one of the pioneers of the Gaelic League. He and a lady named Miss MacNeill were responsible for the foundation of the Gaelic League College in Cloughneely, Co. Donegal. This College is still functioning. He was a striking figure and a great walker, He always wore Donegal Homespuns and spent a great portion of his holidays in Donegal. On several visits to Dublin I was in his company. Mrs. Riddle started a Toy Industry in Ballycastle and Mr. Stephen Clarke became manager of this industry. I served my time here and worked continuously in the factory up to the time I went 'on the run' in 1920. Roger Casement when be was at home was a constant visitor to the factory, also Francis. Joseph Bigger. The place was a rallying ground for Nationalists, Most of them holding extreme views on Irish politics. In this way I became very well acquainted with Roger Casement. He constituted himself a sort of teacher to me. I remember on one occasion while in Dublin he pointed out to me Nelson's Pillar. He told' me the history of the monument and said as soon as the Republic was declared he would see that this monument was removed from its site. The idea of a Republic at this time was very rare and was never mentioned, even by members of the Sinn Féin Clubs or their leaders, but Casement evidently had 3. the idea very well planted in his mind that the country would be freed from English rule and that the future Government of the country would be a Republic. One of the activities in which Casement became interested was his association with Francis Joseph Bigger, in organising lectures in various centres all over County Antrim and in Belfast city. These lecture5 dealt with particular phases of Irish history such as the fights in '98. These lectures had, however more than an historic motive. There was generally, sedition mixed up with them. The view was always expressed at these lectures that it was possible to effect the freeing of the country of British rule by adopting similar methods to those which had been adopted in the past. Before the outbreak of the Great War in 1914 there was very little doing in the Sinn Féin organisation in the Ballycastle area, but of course there were several individuals scattered here and there who believed in it. Griffith's pager circulated fairly well there and another paper called "The United Irishman" and one called "The Irish Peasant". In 1912 Carson's Volunteers were formed with drums beating and banners flying. Shortly after the Nationalists followed this example and formed their organisation of the National Volunteers. The first Volunteers to be formed in and around Ballycastle was the National Volunteers who gave allegiance to the Irish Parliamentary Party. The Republicans didn't join this organisation because it was tagged on to the Parliamentary Party. The Nationalist element and the Republican element didn't 4. get on too well around there. At the outbreak of the war the only Volunteers in existence in Ballycastle area were the National Volunteers and Carson's Volunteers. Myself or the people associated with ma would have nothing to do with either force. After the split in the Volunteers, which took place soon after the outbreak of the 1914-1918 war, a Sinn Féin Club was started in Ballycastle. Its members consisted of young men from the locality who held very strong Republican sympathies - about twenty in all joined the Club. During the war years activities of the club consisted of organisational work in an endeavour to strengthen it in preparation for local government elections. These elections were delayed until the war was over. I remember during the year 1915 meeting Denis McCullough, Seán MacDiarmada, Bulmer Hobson and a brother of Denis McCullough and cycling with them to Cushendun. As far as I know the business of these men was concerned with Gaelic League work. Denis McCullough was a frequent visitor to Ballycastle and his work was, as far as I Understood, in connection with the Gaelic League. As I said there was very little done during the war years. except trying to get. the Sinn Féin organisation going and increasing its members. The first incident which roused the people was the Conscription Menace in the early months of 1918. We all got into line preparing for resistance to Conscription. Nationalists of all denominations and many Orangemen were united in the determination to resist the conscription of Irishmen by 5. the British Army. Louis J. Walshe who was then a solicitor in Ballycastle and a native of Maghera, County Berry, took a leading part in the Sinn Féin movement and. in the fight against Conscription. I remember he organised an anti-Conscription meeting for Ballycastle and arranged for a large contingent of Orangemen from a place called Moyarget to take part. The Master of Moyarget Orange Lodge was Chairman of the meeting in Ballycastle. The Orange band. at Moyarget travelled to the meeting by wagonette and when they came to the outskirts of Ballycastle they dismounted and with their instruments joined up with the Sinn Thin Pipe Band and both bands paraded through all the principal thoroughfares of the town before the meeting commenced. The threat of Conscription and the organisation got together by all sections of the people to fight it created a situation which enabled Sinn Féin to progress by leaps and bounds. We had no trouble in getting recruits after the anti-Conscription campaign. Our strength grew so great from the end of the war to the Local Government Elections in 1920 that we ware able to elect a Republican candidate on the County Council for North Antrim. Louis Walshe was the candidate. This election was carried out under Proportional Representation and Mr. Walshe received more than the quota of votes and was the only candidate elected with his quota on the first count in North Antrim. The association of the Orangemen with the anti- Conscription campaign apparently did an amount of good. These men were never very bitter in their attitude towards Republicanism afterwards. One exception to this statement is that at the local elections in Ballymoney 6. a band of young Orangemen attacked and beat up Louis Walshe. During the Local Government Elections and subsequently a large number of Unionists voted Republican. The first change which occurred in this attitude of the Orangemen was in the General Election in 1918. The Sinn Féin leaders were foolish enough to be influenced by the late Cardinal Logue to enter into an agreement with the Irish Parliamentary Party, and in certain northern constituencies with a Nationalist majority there was no election held except to put up Nationalists candidates to oppose the Unionists. The impact of this arrangement on the Orangemind was to confirm them in their belief that Sinn Féin was on a par with the Old Parliamentary Party and that any measure of Home Rule for Ireland meant Rome Rule. This situation did an amount of harm and ruined all chance of a future co-operation with Sinn Féin by National minded1 Unionists. In the year 1919 in north and mid-Antrim the Sinn Féin, Gaelic Athletic Association and the Gaelic League were all closely connected organisations. The members of the Sinn Féin Club were also members of the local G.A.A. and the Gaelic League. We had many discussions at this time concerning starting Companies of the Volunteers in the locality.
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